For many Syrians, their national soccer team’s last-gasp defeat at the hands of Australia on Tuesday was the end of a fairy-tale run.

After six years of brutal civil war, it looked for a short while that Syria might reach next year’s World Cup for the first time in its history. But in the final minutes of overtime, the dream was snatched away.

For some Syrians, however, Australia’s winning goal was a cause for celebration. They had spent every game during this qualifying campaign cheering Syria’s opponents.

“Most people who are affected by this war don’t want the Syrian team to win,” said Abdulkafi al-Hamdo, a 32-year-old teacher living in western Aleppo.

“We cannot call it the Syrian team, it is Assad’s team,” he added, referring to Syrian President Bashar Assad.

More than 400,000 people have been killed and 5 million displaced in Syria’s civil war, which began after the government used the army to put down mass protests against Assad’s rule.

The United Nations says the government has used chemical weapons more than two dozen times during the course of the war. Both rebels and government forces have been accused by rights groups of indiscriminate bombing — the government on a much larger scale.

Syrians wave the national flag as they watch on a screen the 2018 World Cup qualifying soccer match between Australia and Syria, at the Umayyad Square in Damascus, Syria, on Oct. 10, 2017.(Photo: Youssef Badawi, European Pressphoto Agency)

Some hoped that the team’s World Cup run might bring the country together. Due to the security situation inside Syria, the team was forced to play their home games in Malaysia. They won a string of unexpected victories against bigger teams. Even Syrians who had fled their home country packed cafes here in Beirut.

But far from being a unifying event, the national team’s success has divided Syrians along the same lines as the war; generally, those who support the government also support the team, and those who support the political opposition want to see it lose.

When Syria drew with Iran in the previous round to set up a playoff game against Australia, there were celebrations on the streets of the capital, Damascus, and silence in opposition areas.

Al-Hamdo says the government has used the team as a propaganda tool and exploited its success to burnish its own image.

“Assad wanted to use the team’s victories to make political victories for himself. So, when they lost we saw it as Assad losing, when they won we saw it as Assad winning,” he said.

Supporters of the government and the team say politics has nothing to do with it. Ali Hamdan, a dental student from Tartus, in Syria, flew to Australia to watch the game on Tuesday.

“If these just searched the team squad, they would found that Firas al-Khatib, the team’s top player, was from the opposition. The team name is not Assad team, it is the Syrian team,” said Hamdan, now back in Syria.

Al-Khatib is one of Syria’s most revered players. Early on in the war, he announced he would no longer play for the Syrian team while civilians were being bombed. He later had a change of heart after being offered amnesty by the government and rejoined the team.

For Anas Ammo, a sports journalist in Aleppo before the war, the link between the war and the sport runs much deeper.

Over the last few years, he has compiled a list of Syrian soccer players that he says have been killed or gone missing in government jails.

“The Syrian regime took the happiness of football from people,” he said.

“The army has transformed stadiums into military barracks for the killing and bombing of civilians. They have killed 39 Syrian football players, including 11 players under 19 years old. We have 30 Syrian soccer players in jails of the Syrian regime at this moment.”

A Syrian woman takes a photo on her phone bearing a portriat of the Syrian president in Umayyad Square in Damascus as fans gathered to watch a live broadcast of the World Cup qualifying match between Syria and Australia on Oct. 10, 2017.(Photo: Louai Beshara, AFP/Getty Images)

Ammo currently lives in Turkey, where he manages a soccer team made up of Syrian players who cannot get a license to play abroad. The licenses are administered by the Syrian government.

“I’m happy for Australia. I supported them. I didn’t support the Syrian team because it is a political team. The team is always making political statements. They are trying to influence politics with sports,” he said.

But his antipathy toward the national team began way before this qualifying campaign.

“Before the revolution, I didn’t have any interest in the national team. Maybe with my club and my city, but not with the national team,” he said.

“All institutions in Syria are under the authority of the army and the Baath Party. Football in Syria is for Assad, not for Syria. Not just now, for 40 years.”

This article originally appeared on GlobalPost's PRI.org. Its content was created separately to USA TODAY.